Last updated: May 2026
Fat is not the primary focus of a muscle-building diet — protein and carbohydrates tend to dominate the conversation — but it plays a critical supporting role. Get fat intake wrong in either direction and you’ll compromise testosterone levels, hormone function, or training performance. Here’s what the research says about the right amount.
Calculate Your Fat Intake for Muscle Building
Enter your weight, activity level, and muscle gain goal for a personalized daily fat target.
The Evidence-Based Range: 0.5–1.5g Per Kg Per Day
A 2019 peer-reviewed narrative review on bodybuilder nutrition (Iraki et al., Sports MDPI) recommends 0.5–1.5g of fat per kg of body weight per day during the muscle-building phase. Under most circumstances, this equates to 20–35% of total daily calories from fat.
Examples:
| Body Weight | Fat at 0.5g/kg | Fat at 1.0g/kg | Fat at 1.5g/kg |
|---|---|---|---|
| 70 kg (154 lbs) | 35g/day | 70g/day | 105g/day |
| 80 kg (176 lbs) | 40g/day | 80g/day | 120g/day |
| 90 kg (198 lbs) | 45g/day | 90g/day | 135g/day |
| 100 kg (220 lbs) | 50g/day | 100g/day | 150g/day |
For most people, 0.8–1.0g/kg is the practical midpoint that satisfies hormonal needs without displacing too many carbohydrate calories needed for training performance.
Why Fat Intake Matters for Muscle Growth
Testosterone production
Dietary fat is the substrate for steroid hormone synthesis, including testosterone. Multiple controlled studies show that reducing fat intake from 30–40% of calories to 15–25% causes significant, measurable reductions in circulating testosterone in both men and women. Testosterone directly promotes muscle protein synthesis and increases the size and strength of muscle fibers. Insufficient fat intake → lower testosterone → reduced muscle-building stimulus.
Intramuscular triglycerides (IMTG)
Fat stored within muscle fibers (IMTGs) can contribute to energy during resistance training, particularly for longer, higher-volume sessions. While carbohydrates remain the dominant substrate for high-intensity training, adequate fat intake ensures IMTG stores are maintained.
Fat-soluble vitamins
Vitamins A, D, E, and K require dietary fat for absorption. Vitamin D in particular is critical for testosterone production and muscle function — inadequate fat intake limits Vitamin D absorption even when dietary intake is sufficient.
Why You Shouldn’t Go Too High Either
Iraki et al. (2019) noted that high-fat diets — particularly ketogenic protocols with fat comprising 60–75% of calories — have been “consistently inferior to moderate or lower fat approaches with ample carbohydrate” in longitudinal resistance training studies measuring actual muscle mass gains.
The mechanism appears to be carbohydrate displacement. Muscle glycogen (stored carbohydrate) is the primary fuel for high-intensity resistance training. When dietary fat is very high, carbohydrate intake is necessarily very low, which:
- Reduces muscle glycogen stores, limiting training capacity and volume
- Reduces the free testosterone to cortisol ratio, impairing recovery
- May reduce training-induced mTOR signaling that drives muscle protein synthesis
The practical conclusion: for muscle building, fat should be sufficient for hormone support (0.5–1.5g/kg) but should not crowd out the carbohydrates needed to fuel the workouts that drive muscle growth in the first place.
How to Structure Your Fat Calories During a Bulk
In practice, set fat at 0.8–1.0g/kg/day, then allocate remaining calories to protein (1.6–2.2g/kg) and carbohydrates (the rest). This hierarchy ensures the nutrients most critical for muscle protein synthesis and training performance are covered first, with fat filling a supporting role.
Example for an 80 kg person targeting 3,000 calories:
- Protein: 176g (2.2g/kg) = 704 calories
- Fat: 80g (1.0g/kg) = 720 calories
- Carbohydrates: remaining 1,576 calories = 394g
- Fat as % of calories: 720 ÷ 3,000 = 24% — within the 20–35% healthy range
Best Fat Sources for Muscle Building
- Whole eggs: testosterone-supporting cholesterol + complete protein — ideal breakfast or snack
- Salmon (and oily fish): omega-3 (EPA/DHA) — reduces exercise-induced inflammation and may slightly enhance muscle protein synthesis
- Olive oil: monounsaturated fat — linked to healthy testosterone levels; use in cooking or dressings
- Avocados: monounsaturated fat + fiber + potassium — support heart health and satiety
- Mixed nuts: convenient calorie-dense snack for hitting caloric surplus
- Peanut/almond butter: fat + some protein — easy to add to shakes or meals for extra calories
Prioritize unsaturated fat sources. Saturated fat should not exceed 10% of daily calories even during a bulk. Some saturated fat from whole food sources (eggs, dairy) is fine; limit highly processed saturated fat from fried foods and commercial baked goods.
Related Reading
Frequently Asked Questions
Does eating fat increase testosterone?
Eating sufficient fat maintains testosterone at normal levels — it doesn’t elevate testosterone above normal in already well-fed individuals. What low fat does is suppress testosterone. The goal is not to maximize fat intake for maximum testosterone, but to eat enough fat to avoid the suppression that comes with eating too little.
Is a high-fat diet good for building muscle?
No — longitudinal resistance training research consistently shows that high-fat, low-carb diets (including ketogenic) produce inferior muscle mass gains compared to moderate-fat, moderate-to-high carbohydrate approaches. Carbohydrates are essential for fueling the training volume that drives hypertrophy, and replacing carbs with fat doesn’t compensate for that deficit.
Should I cycle fat intake around workouts?
Fat is not important to time around workouts. Unlike carbohydrates (which benefit from peri-workout timing to replenish glycogen) and protein (which benefits from post-workout timing for MPS), fat has no meaningful acute effect on training performance or post-workout recovery. Distribute fat evenly across meals rather than concentrating it around training.
Find Your Muscle-Building Fat Target
Our fat intake calculator generates a daily fat gram recommendation based on your weight, training frequency, and bulk goal.